Medicine Hat News

Layoffs at British Columbia hospice that refused to offer medical assistance in dying

- LAURA DHILLON KANE

DELTA

A British Columbia hospice that refused to offer medical assistance in dying has sent layoff notices to all clinical staff before its contract with the local health authority ends next month.

The Delta Hospice Society board said in a news release Friday that it deeply regrets “being compelled” to take the action due to Fraser Health cancelling its contract over its refusal to comply with a provincial policy requiring hospices to provide assisted death.

Board president Angelina Ireland said the 10-bed Irene Thomas Hospice in Delta, B.C., was a “sanctuary” for dying people who did not want to be in a facility that provided medical assistance in dying, also known as MAiD.

“These people as Canadians have a right to be in a place where there is not MAiD offered. If people want MAiD, and of course we’ve never fought that or debated that, we have a facility right next door to us,” she said in an interview, referring to Delta Hospital.

“Now, what they can’t have is an authentic palliative care facility.”

Fraser Health announced last year it would cancel the society’s service agreement and lease as of Feb. 25, 2021, pulling $1.5 million in annual funding that had covered most of the costs to operate the hospice on health authority-owned land.

At the time, Health Minister Adrian Dix said the government would work to ensure Delta residents still had access to those 10 hospice beds, either at the existing facility under public management or at a separate site.

Fraser Health spokeswoma­n Carrie Stefanson said in a statement Friday that the health authority’s focus continues to be on the care provided to hospice patients during the final month left in the contract and any transition period that takes place.

“We are working on a transition plan and will have more to share soon,” she said. “We have made repeated efforts to work with the current society, including the plan for staff. These efforts have been unsuccessf­ul.”

Fraser Health will work with the provider and the union to ensure all hospice staff who received layoff notices from the society will have employment opportunit­ies within the health authority if they want them, she added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada